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The phrase "a more appropriate benchmark" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing standards or points of reference that are better suited for comparison or evaluation in a specific context.
Example: "After reviewing the data, we concluded that a more appropriate benchmark would provide clearer insights into our performance."
Alternatives: "a better standard" or "a more suitable reference point."
Exact(4)
If these are long-term investments of at least three years, then wouldn't a more appropriate benchmark be a treasury with a duration of at least three years?
Many have suggested a closer look at real-world inferential practices in the sciences as a more appropriate benchmark for assessment.
Since Ukraine less actively participates in electricity trade (about 4%% is exported according to NERC [2009]) with other countries compared to other types of energy, long-term production cost is a more appropriate benchmark for estimation of subsidies than the export border price.
First, Piketty suggests that in order to study the historical trend of inequality in advanced Western economies, France instead of Britain or the United States, is a more appropriate benchmark country.
Similar(56)
Still, Mr. Egan said, a benchmark for a more appropriate valuation of E*Trade's holdings may be the 5percentt discount at which Thornburg Mortgage, a real estate investment trust, sold $20.5 billion of mortgage assets last month.
"Der Bomber" became a more appropriate moniker.
A more appropriate measure might be underemployment.
A more appropriate word is "complicit".
A MORE appropriate commemoration would be unimaginable.
Bellow might be a more appropriate surname.
Boring is a more appropriate word.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com